How To Make Chirashi At Home

Chirashi, also called chirashizushi (ちらし寿司) is one of my favorite Japanese meals. The word "chirashi" means "scattered," so this is basically a big bowl of rice mixed with fish, vegetables, and additional ingredients of your choice. I like this dish a lot, because it's a delicious one-bowl meal that is very filling and very versatile. There are almost no limits to what ingredients go in chirashi, and if you're a vegetarian, you could make a vegetable-only chirashi - it does not need to have fish.

If you're in the mood for rice and fish but don't want to make sushi rolls, then chirashi is the best option. This dish can require very little preparation or it can be more elaborate, it is your choice. Since there are many variations, let's start with the rice. Traditionally sushi rice is used, and chirashi rice contains more rice vinegar than is used in sushi maki rolls and nigiri. The rice needs to be made ahead and cooled before using.

When buying seafood, please buy sushi-quality fish at your local Asian market and make sure it is the freshest quality. You can even ask your non-Asian fishmonger at your local supermarket if they have any fish that they recommend as sushi-quality that they would be willing to cut for you. As a last resort, you can order sushi-quality fish online at Catalina Offshore Products.

Home-Style Chirashizushi

Ingredients:2 cups of sushi rice - note, you can use brown short-grain rice if you want.1 cup rice vinegar2 tbsp. sesame seed (optional)1 tbsp. JFC brand katsuo fumi furikake rice seasoning (optional)Vegetables, seafood, prepared foods, fish roe, tsukemono (Japanese pickles,) and eggs of your choice. You can use a lot of things or just a few things. Remember that this is a versatile dish, so don't worry if you can't find a lot of the ingredients that I used.

For the photos above of my chirashi, I used:¼ cup bibinba sansai - a prepared mix of soybean sprouts, scallion, mushrooms, and carrots that I bought at Nijiya Market in San Francisco Japantown¼ cup kanton sai - another prepared mix of pickled vegetables that I got at Nijiya¼ cup each of fresh tuna, salmon, Pacific conch, and boiled octopus cut in bite-size pieces2 fresh shiso leavesAbout 3 tbsp. of tobiko (flying fish roe)Fresh sliced lotus root that I steamed in water and then marinated in a mix of soy sauce and ponzuHalf of a scallion, finely sliced2 shiitake mushrooms sliced and marinated in ponzu1 umeboshi plum, pit removed, and chopped finely2 quail eggs, hard-boiled

Cook the rice and let stand for 10 minutes. Add to a bowl with the rice vinegar and mix well. Add the sesame seeds and the rice seasoning if you desire, and mix well.

At this point, you have two options. You can add some rice to the bottom half of a wide, shallow bowl and arrange your chirashi ingredients neatly to the edge of the bowl, like they do in a restaurant, and then mix them up when served at the table. This looks really pretty, but it is a lot more work, especially if you're making several chirashi. The second option, which is quicker and more traditionally home-style, is to add all your ingredients to the big bowl of rice and mix well, then portion individually. Please note that the amounts of seafood and vegetables I noted above were for one chirashi bowl; if I were going to mix up the entire 2 cups of rice, I would have doubled the topping amounts.